Search Results for: America
10 results out of 1848 results found for 'America'.
CHINA POWER; REPATRIATED HIGH-END PRODUCTION; ECOTEXTILES AND GM COTTON - A TASTE OF THE FUTURE FOR CLOTHING AND TEXTILES
BY EMMA JACKSON
THE TEXTILE and clothing industry maybe almost unrecognisable from its organisation today in 10 years’ time: Chinese-owned offshore production; unstoppable e-commerce, demand for eco-textiles, shifting luxury markets to Asia’s new middle class, and higher prices for everyone, are just some predictions.…
UNODC HELPING DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BOOST THEIR AML CONTROLS
BY SHANNELLE LAMARE, KEITH NUTHALL
FOR the last five years the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), in partnership with the World Bank (WB), has been operating the Global Programme against Money Laundering (GPML) to boost Vietnam’s AML/CFT (anti-money laundering and combating financing of terrorism) systems.…
TRADE BENEFITS LOOM FOR TOBACCO SECTOR IF WORLD TRADE ORGANISATION GRASPS DOHA NETTLE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
SIGNIFICANT benefits to tobacco and tobacco product companies will present themselves if a deal on the long-running Doha Development Round is clinched next year at the World Trade Organisation (WTO). And some diplomats at the WTO’s base in Geneva are asking if agreement is not reached next year, whether the current negotiations will be scrapped.…
NEW INNOVATIONS KEEPING CODING SECTOR AFLOAT AFTER RECESSION
BY EMMA JACKSON
CONSUMERS barely notice the tiny band of code printed on their soft drink can or prescription bottle, but behind the scenes the coding and marking industry thrives on making those seemingly insignificant lines of print more readable, efficient and better integrated with high technology.…
GEORGIA BOOSTS WINE QUALITY TO FIND NEW NON-RUSSIAN MARKETS
BY MARK GODFREY
GEORGIA’S wine industry took every opportunity to bask in the limelight when the 2010 International Organisation of Vine and Wine (OIV) Congress was staged in Georgia’s capital Tbilisi. Opening the June congress, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili (NOTE – SPELLING IS CORRECT) even took the opportunity to praise local product as a "freedom wine", boasting that Russia’s four-year ban on Georgian wine has only improved its quality.…
EUROPEAN CARMAKERS RACE TO IMPROVE EU-KOREA TRADE DEAL BEFORE IMMINENT FINAL VOTE
BY KEITH NUTHALL, MJ DESCHAMPS
EUROPEAN car makers will push for additional changes to the controversial European Union (EU)-South Korea free trade agreement when it is placed before the European Parliament for ratification. The spokesperson for the European automobile manufacturers association ACEA Sigrid de Vries told wardsauto it wanted the deal’s text revised to help Europe’s auto sector.…
SOUTHEAST ASIAN PAINT COMPANIES CAPTURE ASEAN MARKET WITH HUB-AND-SPOKE MODEL
BY MARK ROWE
IN the truly global market of the paint industry, nowhere has the maxim of work local, sell local, been adhered to more rigorously than in southeast Asia. The region’s paint market is fiercely competitive, driven by developed nations such as Singapore and populous rapidly developing countries such as Indonesia and the Philippines.…
CHINA POWER; REPATRIATED HIGH-END PRODUCTION; ECOTEXTILES AND GM COTTON - A TASTE OF THE FUTURE FOR CLOTHING AND TEXTILES
BY EMMA JACKSON
THE TEXTILE and clothing industry maybe almost unrecognisable from its organisation today in 10 years’ time: Chinese-owned offshore production; unstoppable e-commerce, demand for eco-textiles, shifting luxury markets to Asia’s new middle class, and higher prices for everyone, are just some predictions.…
GLOBAL - DEMAND FOR 'NATURAL' DRINKS INGREDIENTS RISING IN MATURE DRINKS MARKETS
BY ALAN OSBORN, KARRYN MILLER, GAVIN BLAIR, KEITH NUTHALL
MOST drinks manufacturers would bridle at the accusation that they used anything unnatural to make their products: after all poisoning consumers is bad for business. But in the world of marketing, everything is relative, and some ingredients are so fresh and untainted with processing chemicals that they can, simply, be sold as being more ‘natural’ than standard inputs.…
LAWYERS WORLDWIDE FEAR THEIR OWN PROFESSION IS PREY TO CORRUPTION
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A NEW global survey involving the International Bar Association (IBA) has revealed widespread concern amongst lawyers that their profession is compromised by corruption. Working with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation & Development (OECD), the IBA showed that nearly half of all respondents stated corruption was an issue in their own legal profession; more than 70% said so in the former Soviet Union, Africa, Latin America, the Baltic States and eastern Europe.…